Traditional Muzzleloading Association

The Center of Camp => People of the Times => Topic started by: Craig Tx on October 24, 2025, 04:08:56 PM

Title: 10/24/1690: Llanos-Cardenas expedition begins mapping Matagorda Bay
Post by: Craig Tx on October 24, 2025, 04:08:56 PM
On this day in 1690, the ship Nuestra Senora de la Encarnacion anchored off Cavallo Pass, the natural entrance to Matagorda Bay, and its crew began mapping the bay.

The ship was under the command of Francisco de Llanos, and the mapmaking was assigned to the engineer Manuel Jose' de C?rdenas y Magana. The expedition had left Veracruz on October 12. Its mission was to evaluate the environs of the defunct French Fort St. Louis as a site for a Spanish presidio, to seek a water route to the new San Francisco de los Tejas Mission, and to map Espiritu Santo (i.e., Matagorda) Bay. The expedition determined that neither the Lavaca River nor the Colorado afforded a water route to the mission. The reconnaissance map--one of a series of Spanish cartographic representations of the Texas coast--gave twentieth-century historian Herbert E. Bolton reason to place the site of Fort St. Louis on Garcitas Creek in Victoria County.

Craig's Note:  I live on Matagorda Bay.  IIRC, one of the Fort St. Louis cannons is in our local library.
Title: Re: 10/24/1690: Llanos-Cardenas expedition begins mapping Matagorda Bay
Post by: Nessmuk on October 27, 2025, 10:14:35 AM
Wait!! INSIDE the Library? That's my kind of town!!